Tag Archives: misdiagnosis

Below, a guest-post by Dr. Clifton K. Meador, the author of well-known satirical writings on the excesses in our medical system, including “The Art and Science of Non Disease,” (the New England Journal of Medicine, 1965) and “The Last Well Person,” an essay he published as an “Occasional Note” in NEJM in 1994. HealthBeat readers may remember past guest-posts by Meador including “The Art of “Diagnosis” drawn from his book True Medical Detective Stories, and “The Unheard Heart: A Metaphor,”

In this guest-post Meador writes about the importance of listening to patients—something that often doesn’t happen in a 15 minute office visit. I’m hopeful that under reform, more and more doctors will be able practice medicine full-time, leaving billing, hiring and firing of support personnel ,and all of the other time-consuming details of running a business to others. Telemedicine also should open up some time: rather than coming in for a 15 minute appointment, patients who don’t have questions could ask for refills of routine prescriptions on the phone or via e-mail.

Eventually Health IT will be good enough that doctors will no longer spend hours tracking down lost Faxes. Finally, more physicians will be dividing their work with nurse-practitioners. In some cases, the nurse-practitioner might be especially effective when dealing with chronically ill elderly patients; in other cases he or she might excel in treating adolescents.

Ideally, restructuring how care is delivered will lead to longer appointments with some patients, giving the doctor the opportunity to truly listen—particularly when the cause of physical symptoms remains a mystery.

If a doctor had more time, what would he discover? Here, Meador offers what some may consider a radical thesis: 55 years of experience as a primary care physician, combined with studying the medical literature, has convinced him that “between 30 and 40 percent of first contact primary care visits are stress- related or are psychological in nature.”

I’m particularly intrigued by his description of “psychosomatic disorders” as described by Dr. John E. Sorno in The Divided Mind.

I haven’t yet read the book, but look forward to doing so. The reviews are impressive. As Meador makes clear, to say that an ailment is “psychosomatic” does not mean that “it’s all in your mind.”

Finally, Meador mentions that at this time, the medical profession denies the existence of psychosomatic illnesses. I’m baffled. Both life experience and years of reading have convinced me that mind and body cannot be separated. I’d be interested in hearing from other physicians on this point. — MM

Before we can understand the high cost of not listening, we need to examine in detail the diagnostic process. I am limiting my discussion to patients with chronic or recurring symptoms lasting several months. I am not discussing acute illnesses. They fall into completely different category.

The symptoms are real. Meador does not assume that because he can’t crack the case, the patient must be a hypochondriac. Something is triggering the pain. It’s just not something that a doctor will find on a list of known maladies. For example, the coal-miner’s wife wasn’t suffering from a rare disease; she was “dusting” her cat.

“Most patients in primary care have stressors causing their symptoms either from home or work,” Meador adds. “I agree with the old dictum that says ‘what the mind cannot absorb goes to the body.’’

Ultimately, he believes, “the insistence on a diagnosis” –i.e. the pressure to find a disease –“is at the heart of medical excesses and false diagnoses.”

“The reasons we are wrong are not related to technical mistakes, like someone putting the wrong name on an X-ray or mixing up a blood specimen in the lab,” he adds. “Nor is it really ignorance about what the actual disease is. We make misdiagnoses because we make errors in thinking.”

The initial “snap judgment “could be based on the first thing the patient says,” he points out. “It could be based on something on their chart or in their file that somebody else has concluded in the past. It could be anything.” At that point, a doctor is likely to order tests that he believes will confirm his diagnosis. Often those tests do just that–or at least they seem to, in part because the physician expects that they will.

But Groopman warns, “each step along the way, we see how essential it is for even the most astute doctor to doubt his thinking, to repeatedly factor into his analysis the possibility that he is wrong.”

How can a doctor avoid misdiagnosis?

Not All Patients Fit On a “Decision Tree”

“The trunk of the clinical decision tree is a patient’s major symptom or laboratory result, contained within a box. Arrows branch from the first box to other boxes,” he explains. “For example, a common symptom like ‘sore throat would begin the algorithm, followed by a series of branches with ‘yes’ or ‘no’ questions about associated symptoms. Is there a fever or not? Are swollen lymph nodes associated with the sore throat? Have other family members suffered from this symptom?

“Similarly, a laboratory test like a throat culture for bacteria would appear farther down the trunk of the tree, with branches based on ‘yes’ or ‘no answers to the results of the culture. Ultimately, following the branches to the end should lead to the correct diagnosis and therapy.”

He is quick to acknowledge that “clinical algorithms can be useful for run-of-the-mill diagnosis, distinguishing strep throat from viral pharyngitis, for example. But they quickly fall apart when a doctor needs to think outside their boxes, when symptoms are vague, or multiple and confusing, or when test results are inexact. In such cases — the kinds of cases where we most need a discerning doctor — algorithms discourage physicians from thinking independently and creatively. Instead of expanding a doctor’s thinking, they can constrain it.”

If the doctor attends to the patient in front of him, not just by listening to him, but by observing him–perhaps even laying hands on him– he may realize that the patient just doesn’t fit on the tree.

In the course of his clinical practice, this is just what Clifton Meador discovered.

Experience would teach Meador that he was wrong. “Over several decades, as he saw patients with clear symptoms but no discernible disease, he concluded that his own assumptions about diagnosis were too narrow. In time he came to reject a strict adherence to the prevailing bio-molecular models of disease and its separation of mind and body.”

He studied other theories and approaches–for instance “George Engel’s biopsychosocial model of disease.” (Engel recognized the effect that our social environment has on our body/minds; he believed that physicians treating the body must also take notice of “psycho-social issues.)

“Meador also came to recognize Michael Balint’s studies of physicians,” his publisher reports. (Balint coined the term “patient-centered medicine” and stresses the importance of the doctor-patient relationship. In “The Doctor, His Patient and the Illness.” Balint concludes that once a doctor and a patient agreed on a diagnosis, the “non-disease” becomes incurable.)

As a result, his publisher notes Meador came to recognize “the defense mechanisms that physicians use to cope when encountering their patients’ distress” –and adjusted his practice accordingly to treat what he called ‘nondisease’.” He had to “retool” his publisher reports, “learn new and more in-depth interviewing and listening techniques, and undergo what Balint termed a ‘slight but significant change in personality.’”

Defense Mechanisms: the “Physicians’ Creed”

When a patient visits a doctor complaining of symptoms, he expects the doctor to diagnose what ails him. If he doesn’t, the patient is likely to view the visit a failure.

For his part, the physician presented with a patient in pain quite naturally wants to solve the problem. His medical training has taught him that the resident who names the disease wins the gold star. Thus, both patient and doctor conspire to “insist” on a diagnosis.

If the doctor cannot find a satisfactory answer, or the patient does not respond to treatment for the diagnosed disease, the physician may become testy–and ultimately blame the patient. In Symptoms of Unknown Origin, Meador quotes Michael Balint:

“every doctor has a set of fairly firm beliefs as to which illnesses are acceptable and which are not; how much pain, suffering, fears and deprivations a patient should tolerate, and when he has a right to ask for help and relief: how much nuisance the patient is allowed to make of himself and to whom, etc., etc.

“These beliefs are hardly ever stated explicitly but are nevertheless very strong. They compel the doctor to do his best to convert all of his patients to accept his own standards and to be well or to get well according to them.”

Balint then goes on to describe a hypothetical “physician’s creed” based on a conventionally narrow biomolecular model of illness. The creed reads: “I believe my job as a physician is to find and classify each disease of my patient, prescribe the proper medicine, or recommend the appropriate surgical procedure. The patient’s responsibility is to take the medicine I prescribe and follow my recommendations. I believe that man’s body and mind are separate and that disease occurs either in the mind or in the body. I see no relationship of the mind to the disease of the body.

“Medical disease (‘real,’or ‘organic’ disease) is caused by a single physicochemical defect such as by invasion of the body by a foreign agent (virus, bacterium or toxin) or from some metabolic derangement arising within the body. I see no patient who fails to have a medical disease.” (Hat Tip to “The Renaissance Allergist” for posting Balint’s comments on his blog

One wonders how many students graduate from medical school today believing some rough version of this doctrine. At least one reader commenting on Meador’s book suggests that the “Creed” remains part of our medical culture:

As we struggle to reduce that amount of overtreatment in our medical system, I hope that medical educators will begin to warn young doctors against the “insistence” on finding a single organic “defect.” Very often, behind human suffering, a wise physician and compassionate physician will find multiple causes–biological, psychological and sociological–that cannot be easily separated.

I recall a post I published on HealthBeat in May of 2011 quoting a doctor who mistook poverty for disease: “I diagnosed ‘abdominal pain’ when the real problem was hunger. . . . My medical training had not prepared me for this ambush of social circumstance. Real-life obstacles had an enormous impact on my patients’ lives, but because I had neither the skills nor the resources for treating them, I ignored the social context of disease altogether.” She was able to help her young patient only when she realized that he was going to bed with an empty stomach.